Data and call routing and forwarding

ABSTRACT

A system and method for determining an order in which to communicate with a list of numbers and/or addresses for a particular contact is disclosed. Each caller that communicates with the contact may specify a different order for the contact&#39;s various phone numbers and other addresses. A communication management system may then automatically dial the numbers or use messaging addresses to initiate data communications in the specified order when the initiating party attempts to communicate with the contact. The order may specify simultaneous and/or sequential use of numbers or addresses. Alternatively or additionally, the communication management system may dynamically and/or automatically determine the communication order or a portion thereof. The automatic determination of the order may be based on a communication history or communication receiving of the initiating party. In some arrangements, the order may be partially manually defined and partially automatically defined.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is related to, incorporates by reference, and isa continuation of U.S. Non-Provisional patent application Ser. No.12/897,994, entitled “Data and Call Routing and Forwarding”, filed Oct.5, 2010.

BACKGROUND

Current telephony systems allow a user to define an order in which acall is routed when the user cannot be reached at one or more numbers.Accordingly, a caller may be unable to control how his or her call isrouted to the user although there may be a preferred or more efficientcalling order. Furthermore, defining the call order, e.g., when done bythe user, is generally a manual process that may require significantinvestments of time, especially if the user must define a call order foreach and every contact in his or her address book.

BRIEF SUMMARY

The following presents a simplified summary of the disclosure in orderto provide a basic understanding of some aspects. It is not intended toidentify key or critical elements of the disclosure or to delineate thescope of the disclosure. The following summary merely presents someconcepts of the disclosure in a simplified form as a prelude to the moredetailed description provided below.

According to aspects described herein, a caller may define a call orderfor multiple phone numbers and/or addresses (e.g., voice chat address,instant messaging address, SMS or MMS addresses, e-mail addresses, etc.)associated with a particular contact. Accordingly, instead of having thecontact defining the order in which addresses and numbers are used toinitiate communication, the party initiating the communication (e.g., acaller) may be provided with such control. In one arrangement, a firstcaller may define a first call order for a contact while a second callermay define a second call order (different form the first call order) forthe same contact. The call order may also provide sequential andsimultaneous dialing. The caller may then be connected to the contact atthe first answered call. The call order may be stored and retrievedbased on an association between the order and the caller and thecontact. For example, the call order may be stored in a look-up tableusing a caller telephone number and a contact name or telephone numberas search keys. The order may include initiating communications usinge-mail addresses, SMS or MMS addresses or numbers, instant messagingaddresses or handles and the like.

According to another aspect, a communication order for acontact-initiator pair may be automatically and/or dynamicallydetermined by a communication management system. The communication ordermay be defined based on an initiating party's communication history(e.g., a call history) and, for example, an order in which theinitiating party has historically used the contact's numbers andaddresses. In one arrangement, a portion of the initiating party'scommunication history may be selected for determining the communicationorder. The portion may be selected based on various factors including arecency of the portion, whether the portion of the history occurs in asimilar time of day as a communication currently being made to thecontact, a number of addresses or numbers of the contact matched in theportion and/or combinations thereof. Alternatively or additionally, acommunication order may be defined based on a likelihood a number oraddress will be answered.

According to another aspect, a portion of a communication order may beinitiating party-defined (e.g., caller-defined) while another portion ofthe order may be automatically or dynamically determined by acommunication management system.

The details of these and other embodiments of the present disclosure areset forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Otherfeatures and advantages of the disclosure will be apparent from thedescription and drawings, and from the claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The present disclosure is illustrated by way of example and not limitedin the accompanying figures in which like reference numerals indicatesimilar elements and in which:

FIG. 1 illustrates an example telephone network through which calls maybe routed according to one or more aspects described herein.

FIG. 2 illustrates a call management system configured to route callsaccording to a caller specified call order according to one or moreaspects described herein.

FIG. 3 illustrates a method by which a call order for multiple phonenumbers of a contact may be defined by a caller and implemented by acall management system according to one or more aspects describedherein.

FIG. 4 illustrates an example user interface through which a call ordermay be defined.

FIG. 5 illustrates a method by which a call order may be automaticallydefined according to one or more aspects described herein.

FIG. 6 illustrates selection of a call order analysis period from auser's call history according to one or more aspects described herein.

FIG. 7 is a flowchart illustrating a call order determination methodaccording to one or more aspects described herein.

FIG. 8 is a flowchart illustrating a call order determination methodaccording to one or more aspects described herein.

FIG. 9 is a flowchart illustrating a method by which a call or datatransmission may be initiated and processed according to one or moreaspects described herein.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example user interface through which a contactorder may be defined according to one or more aspects described herein.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

FIG. 1 illustrates an example communication network that allows a userto configure how calls should be directed (e.g., to voice chat, to atelephone, etc.) and managed. The communication network may includemultiple portions including, for example, a public switched telephonenetwork (PSTN) 107, and digital networks 109, such as coaxial cablenetworks, optical fiber networks, hybrid fiber/coax networks (HFC),cellular telephone wireless networks, local wireless networks (e.g.,WiMAX), satellite networks, etc. Networks 107 and 109 may both bededicated telephone or voice communication networks, or networks alsocarrying other data and content, such as video signals. In one or morearrangements, network 109 may support a digital voice network bydigitizing voice communication and transmitting data over lines of thenetwork 109. A digital voice network may be supported by a coaxial cablenetwork, a fiber optic cable network, a satellite network, a wirelessnetwork, or any other desired physical network architecture. In one ormore configurations, a digital voice network might only be accessible bysubscribers to a service provider; however, the network may beaccessible by non-subscribing users.

Network 109 may further support access to a packet switched-data networkincluding, for example, a wide area network (WAN) such as the Internet.Networks 107 and 109 may interoperate through interconnected systemsincluding Internet Protocol (IP) Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) 101configured to manage the operations of and services offered by a serviceprovider over a digital voice network supported by network 109. PSTNgateway 105 may be configured to process communications to and from apublic switched telephone network such as telephone network 107, while acommunication gateway 103 may be configured to process and managecommunications over a publicly accessible data network (e.g., theInternet).

IMS 101 provides various services and features to a network of usersthrough a digital voice network. Services may include voicecommunications, voicemail, call forwarding, call waiting, calleridentification (ID) and the like. In one example, voice mail server 117provides a database in which voice mail messages may be stored.Accordingly, IMS 101 or another server or system may direct voice mailmessages to voice mail server 117 if a called party is not currentlyavailable (e.g., line is busy, no answer, etc.). IMS 101 may furtherinteract with IMS feature server 115 to control connection services,select processes/services that may be applied to a call, provide routingwithin a network such as digital voice network 109, and the like. In oneor more arrangements, voice communication devices or accounts may beidentified by a voice communication address. A voice communicationaddress may include, for example, PSTN telephone numbers, instantmessaging handles, voice chat network addresses (e.g., IP addresses),e-mail addresses and the like.

By interfacing with PSTN gateway 105, IMS 101 may receive publicswitched telephone calls and digitize the calls, as needed, so that theymay be directed to users of a digital voice service, voice mail server117 or a user on a data network through communication gateway 103 andnetwork 109. IMS 101 may register telephone numbers through PSTN gateway105 such that calls to a number associated with a digital voice networkuser may be routed appropriately. Additionally, PSTN gateway 105 mayprovide IMS 101 with a way to access telephone network 107 so that callsoriginating from a communication device using digital voice services(e.g., phones 123) or other (e.g., Internet) data services(communication devices 121 such as personal computer (PC) 121 a, laptopcomputer 121 b, mobile communication device 121 c and telecommunicationdevices 123 a and 123 b) may be properly directed to a user or device ontelephone network 107.

Communication gateway 103 may provide IMS 101 with the capability toprocess voice chat, SMS, MMS or other data communications over network109. For example, if a voice chat communication request is received frommessaging service 119, communication gateway 103 may be configured todetermine an intended recipient of the voice chat communications basedon a specified voice communication address and instruct IMS 101 toprocess the voice chat communications appropriately. Messaging service119 may include an instant messaging service having voice chatcapabilities such as those provided by Yahoo, Google, AOL and Skype.

Further, according to one or more aspects of the disclosure, one or moreof systems 101, 103, 115 and 117 may be configured to direct calls tomultiple numbers or addresses of a contact in a predetermined orpredefined order. That is, when a user initiates a call to a contactthat has multiple numbers or address associated therewith, acommunication management system such as IMS 101 may determine an orderor implement a predefined order in which the numbers or addressesassociated with the contact should be called or otherwise contacted.This order may be specified by the caller, for example. Accordingly, theorder in which a contact's numbers are called may be different dependingon the caller, the contact or other parameters. The order may bespecified before a call or during a call depending on a systemconfiguration and/or caller preferences. Alternatively or additionally,the order may be determined automatically based on a caller's callinghistory and/or a contact's call receiving history.

In one example, a contact's cell phone may be called first followed byhis office number if there was no answer on the cell phone. Additionallyor alternatively, calls may be placed simultaneously to multiple numberssuch as to all or some of the numbers and/or addresses associated with acontact. A call connection may then be established between the callerand the contact at the number answered first. If none of the numbers areanswered, the call may be directed to a voicemail server such as server117. In some arrangements, the order in which the contact's numbers arecalled may be caller-specified. Alternatively, the order may beautomatically determined by IMS 101 based on the caller's call orcommunication history or the contact's call or communication receivinghistory, as further described herein. Moreover, in one or moreconfigurations, a caller's device such as a cell phone 125 a orstationary telephone 123 a or 125 b may be configured to perform thecall establishment and forwarding functionality described herein.

FIG. 2 illustrates an example communication management system configuredto establish communications between a party initiating the communicationand a contact. The communication management system, in one embodiment,may include a call management system 200 configured to coordinate andestablish telephonic communications between parties (e.g., a caller anda contact). System 200 may include a variety of components including aprocessor 201, random access memory (RAM) 203, read-only memory (ROM)205, database 207, network adapter 209, media/PSTN gateway 211, radiotransceiver 213 and the like. Call management system 200 may comprise oract as an IMS (e.g., IMS 101 of FIG. 1) or personal communication devicesuch as cell phone 125 a and/or stationary telephone 123 a (FIG. 1).Processor 201 may be configured to perform a variety of mathematicalcalculations in conjunction with executing instructions stored in RAM203 and/or ROM 205. Database 207 may be configured to store varioustypes of data including contact names, contact numbers, and calldirection/forwarding rules. Network adapter 209 may be used to connectand interface with one or more data networks such as the Internetthrough wired or wireless connections. Media/PSTN gateway 211, on theother hand, may be configured to establish plain old telephone service(POTS) calls and/or voice over Internet protocol (VOIP) calls.Alternatively or additionally, system 200 may include a radiotransceiver 213 configured to facilitate connections with one or morewireless telecommunication networks including cellular networks.

In operation, call management system 200 may receive a request to call acontact from a caller's communication device 220. For example, therequest may be a simple request from a cell phone to dial a number, orfrom a computer, etc. The request may specify the contact's name orother identification, and/or one of multiple numbers associated with thecontact. Call management system 200 may then identify multiple numbersassociated with the contact based on the contact's name and/or thenumber specified in the request. A caller-specified order in which tocall the multiple numbers may subsequently be determined from database207, for example. The order in which the multiple numbers are to becalled may include a sequential and/or simultaneous calling of thecontact's numbers. For example, contact's cell phone 221 may be calledfirst, followed by office phone 223 if the call to cell phone 221 is notanswered. If an answer is not received after the call to office phone223, a further call may be made to home phone 225. Alternatively, theorder may dictate that the contact's cell phone 221 and home phone 225are to be called simultaneously, followed by office phone 223 if neithercell phone 221 nor home phone 225 is answered. With respect to thesimultaneous calls to cell phone 221 and home phone 225, the first callor device that is answered may be the one to which the caller isconnected. For example, upon requesting a call to the contact, thecaller's communication device 220 may be placed on hold until an activeconnection (e.g., a live answered call) is established. The caller'scommunication device 220 may then be connected via the active call.

Database 207 may store a call order for a contact's phone numbers inassociation with a user. Thus, the order in which the numbers are calledmay be customized for different users (e.g., callers). In somearrangements, the order may be automatically determined by callmanagement system 200 based on a caller's calling history or thecontact's history of receiving calls at particular devices. Furthermore,the order may be automatically determined dynamically or on-the-fly.That is, the order may be determined at the time the call to the contactis initiated/requested. In other arrangements, the order may bedetermined by the caller, either previously or in real time.

A communication management system such as call management system 200 mayfurther be configured to coordinate and facilitate the establishment ofnon-telephonic communications including e-mail messaging, short messageservice (SMS) or multimedia messaging service (MMS) messaging, instantmessaging and the like. For example, call management system 200 mayinitially attempt to establish a call with a contact using a home phonenumber. If that call goes unanswered, the call management system 200 maysubsequently try sending an SMS message to a mobile communication deviceof the contact using the mobile communication device number or address.

FIG. 3 illustrates an example method by which a call may be initiatedbased on a caller specified dialing order. In step 300, for example, acall management system may prompt a user or receive a request from theuser to specify a call order for a particular caller contact. A user maymake such a request through the calling device (e.g., cell phone,personal computer, television). In step 305, the call management systemmay determine a list of numbers corresponding to a particular contact.The list of numbers and/or addresses may include numbers for differentlocations and/or devices at which the contact may be reached. Thenumbers and/or addresses may be retrieved from, for example, thecaller's address book or from a database. The caller's address book maybe stored in a database at the call management system and/or in acaller's device. Alternatively or additionally, the list of numbers maybe determined from a database of numbers stored by the call managementsystem in association with a variety of known contacts. Alternatively,the call management system may be configured to search externaldatabases and sources for numbers/addresses associated with the contact.

In step 310, the call management system may generate and/or displayinformation comprising the list of numbers corresponding to thespecified contact. The display may comprise a user interface, forexample. The list of numbers and/or addresses may initially be displayedin a default or random order. In step 315, the call management systemmay receive user input specifying an order for the list of numbersand/or addresses (e.g., via user's drag-and-drop, assigning and/orweighing numbers, etc.). Optionally, in step 320, the call managementsystem may further receive user input specifying additional numbers notincluded in the initial list and an order in which the additional numbershould be called. A user may specify that the numbers are to be calledin a particular sequence or that some or all numbers (or addresses) maybe contacted simultaneously. For example, numbers that are to be calledsimultaneously may be assigned the same sequence number (e.g., 1, 2, 3,7, etc.). Once the caller has completed assigning the calling order, thecall management system may store the specified order in step 325 forexample by storing in a memory. In one or more arrangements, the ordermay be stored in a look-up table in association with the caller (e.g., acaller name, phone number, account number, etc.) and the contact (e.g.,contact name, phone numbers, account number, etc.).

In step 330, the call management system may detect the initiation of acommunication (e.g., a call) to a contact by a caller. Initiation of acall, for example, may include the user selecting a phone number andinputting a command into the caller's device to request that the callmanagement system place a call to the specified contact. That is, a callmight not be placed until the call management system transmits callingsignals to the specified contact. Because calls from the caller'scommunication device may be managed by the call management system, thecall management system may receive call initiation requests made by auser. In step 335, the call management system may determine if thespecified contact is associated with multiple contact numbers. If not,the call management system may place a call to the single contact numberin step 340. Placing the call may include sending signals through anetwork to a contact's device (e.g., causing a contact's device to ringor otherwise provide a call notification). If, however, the contact isassociated with multiple numbers/addresses, the call management systemmay determine a caller specified order in which to call the multiplenumbers/addresses in step 345. For example, the order may be retrievedor determined from a look-up table stored in a database using thecaller's identity (e.g., a telephone number, Subscriber Identity Module(SIM) card number) and the contact's identity (e.g. telephone number,name, nickname) as search keys. Alternatively, the order may beretrieved from the caller's device or caller's database.

Upon determining the call order, the call management system may initiatea call to each of the numbers (or contact each address) in sequence. Instep 350, for instance, the system may call the first number in thespecified order. In step 355, the system may determine whether the callhas been answered. If not, the system may end the first call anddetermine whether additional numbers have yet to be called in step 360.If additional numbers have yet to be called, the system may place a callto the next number in the order in step 350. If, on the other hand, noadditional numbers are left in the calling order, the system mayoptionally establish a call between the caller and a voicemail server instep 365. If the system determines that call is answered in step 355,the system may connect the caller to the contact at the answered numberin step 370.

As noted, in some instances, a call order may specify that two or morenumbers are to be called simultaneously. In such arrangements, thesystem may place a call to each of the two or more numbers. The callermay then be connected to the number or address that is first answeredwhile disconnecting or ending the calls to the other numbers. If none ofthe calls are answered, the system may proceed to determine ifadditional numbers have yet to be called as shown in step 360.

FIG. 4 illustrates an example user interface through which a user mayspecify the order in which multiple numbers of a contact are to becalled. Interface 400 may display a list of phone numbers 401 associatedwith a particular contact, Joe S. The list of phone numbers 401 mayfurther include a description of the number 403. For example, thedescription for phone number 401 may indicate that number 401 a is ahome phone number while phone number 401 b is Joe's cell phone number.If the user wishes to add another number for the contact, the user mayenter the number in field 407 and select add function button 408. If theuser wishes to delete a number, on the other hand, the user may selectdelete function button 405. The user may modify the order in which thenumbers 401 are called by entering the order in fields 409. For example,if 555-555-3456 (e.g., number 401 c) is to be called first, the number‘1’ may be entered into the corresponding field 409. Simultaneouscalling may be indicated by specifying the same order number for the twophone numbers. For example, numbers 401 b and 401 c are set to be calledsimultaneously as indicated by the fact that both numbers 401 b and 401c are second in the call order. Once a user has entered a desired orderin field 409, the user may select reorder function 411 to update theorder in the list. The user may further reset the order using option413. The reset option 413 may return the list order to a default orderor an immediately previous call order. Once the user completedmodifications to the call order, the user may select the confirm option415 to have the call order stored and entered into use.

According to one or more aspects, a user may define and store multipleorders of numbers for a single contact. For example, a normal call ordermay be defined for non-emergency calls and an emergency call order maybe defined for more urgent calls. A user may select which order to useat the time of dialing/calling (e.g., an order based on time of day,such as morning or evening, or type of day, such as weekday or weekend,etc.) or upon being prompted by the call management system to select aparticular call order. Alternatively or additionally, the user may beallowed to select between a caller defined order or a dynamicallygenerated order (e.g., based on the user's calling history or thecontact's call answering history). Still further, a user may overridecalling orders (e.g., to dial a single number) by specifying a dialingcode or other key. For example, the user may dial *555 to disableautomated dialing of multiple numbers. In another example, the callforwarding/automatic call order feature may be turned off by deselectingan option in a configuration screen (e.g., of a telephone serviceprovider).

The order in which a contact's various phone numbers are called may beautomatically and/or dynamically generated without manual userspecification. For example, a user's call history may be consulted todetermine the order in which the multiple numbers should be called. FIG.5 illustrates an example method for dynamically and automaticallygenerating a call order based on a prior order or how a set of numbersand/or addresses of a contact was previously used. In step 500, a callmanagement system may detect the initiation of a call to a contact by acaller. For purposes of describing FIG. 5, it is assumed the contact isassociated with a plurality of phone numbers. The call management systemmay make this determination using a process similar to step 335 of FIG.3. In step 505, the call management system may identify the multiplenumbers associated with the contact. Again, the numbers may beidentified from the caller's address book or a directory or databaseinternal or external to the call management system.

In step 510, the call management system may identify one or more timesin the caller's call history at which the contact was called using theidentified numbers. For example, a search may be performed on thecaller's call history to identify all instances where one of thecontact's numbers appears in the caller's call history. In step 515, theidentified instances may be pared down by eliminating instances that donot fall within a similar time of day as a current time of day. Forexample, instances falling outside of 1 hour before or after the currenttime of day may be eliminated from the search results. Alternatively, instep 515, the system may eliminate instances that do not fall within asimilar type of day, e.g., weekday or weekend. In step 520, the systemmay subsequently select one of the remaining identified instances to useto determine a call order. The selection may be made based on how recenta call was made. For example, the most recent identified instance may beselected. Alternatively or additionally, the call management system mayselect an instance based on how many of the contact's numbers appearwithin a predefined or predetermined time period of the instance (e.g.,30 seconds before and after each instance). The call instancecorresponding to the time period in which the most numbers of thecontact appear may then be identified and selected. If, however,multiple instances have the same number of matches, the most recent maybe selected. Such instance selection is further described below withrespect to FIG. 6. In other arrangements, multiple instances may beselected for analysis.

In step 525, a portion of the caller's call history may be extracted todetermine the call order. The boundaries of the extracted portion may bedefined by a predefined amount of time before and after a timecorresponding to the selected instance such as 1 minute, 2 minutes, 30seconds, 15 seconds, 10 seconds, 5 seconds and the like. For example, ifthe selected call instance was made at 1:05 PM, the extracted portionmay include all calls between 1:04 PM-1:06 PM (e.g., given timeboundaries of 1 minute before and after the time of the selected callinstance). In step 530, each number of the contact present in theextracted portion of the call history may be identified. Duplicatecontact numbers may be eliminated, leaving only the earliest instance ofthe contact number. Alternatively, the latest instance of the contactnumber may be preserved. Subsequently, in step 535, the order in whichthe identified contact numbers were called in the extracted portion ofthe call history may be determined. This order may be used as the orderin which the numbers or addresses are to be called or contacted. In step540, the order may be stored and used for directing the initiated callto the contact.

Alternatively or additionally, various other algorithms and methods forautomatically defining a call order may be used. For example, duplicatesmight not be eliminated and instead, be used to define the call order.In one particular example, a number or address may be placed higher inthe order of numbers or addresses the more frequently a number oraddress appears (as further described in FIG. 7). Such an arrangementmay rely upon the assumption that a caller will use (what he or sheconsiders) more reliable or desirable numbers or addresses morefrequently. Frequency may also be used to more accurately match acaller's calling habits. In another example, a number or address may beplaced lower in the order of numbers the more frequently the number oraddress appears (e.g., the frequency may be indicative of a number oraddress being frequently unanswered).

While the process of FIG. 5 is described as being dynamically performedupon detecting the initiation of a call, the call order may beautomatically defined at other times as well, for example, prior to acall being made or upon a user selecting an automatic call routingfeature. Alternatively or additionally, the call order may beautomatically updated based on a predefined schedule or in an on-demandfashion. Moreover, the process of FIG. 5 is only an example and stepsmay be omitted or other steps added.

FIG. 6 illustrates selection of a call order analysis period from acaller's call history based on a list of numbers corresponding to acontact. User's call history 600 may include a list of calls made alongwith times those calls were made. Additionally, the calls may beorganized according to date, from an earliest to a most recent call. Asnoted with respect to FIG. 5, instances 601 of a particular contactnumber such as 555-555-2345 may be identified from call history 600 inorder to define a call order analysis period. Once instances 601 havebeen identified, a portion of the call history before and after eachinstance 601 a, 601 b and 601 c may be analyzed to determine variouscharacteristics, such as a number of contact numbers matched. Theanalyzed portions 603, 605 and 607 may be defined, for example, byretrieving all numbers dialed within a period between one minute beforeand after each of identified instances 601. Portions 603, 605 and 607,as illustrated, only display numbers of the contact. Other numbers(e.g., of users other than the contact) may, for example, be removedprior to call order analysis. Other time periods may be used to defineportions 603, 605 and 607. For example, all numbers in a period between,for example, 3, 5, or 10 minutes before and after each of instances 601may be retrieved and analyzed. In another example, all numbers calledwithin a period beginning 2 minutes before and ending 5 minutes aftereach of instances 601 a, 601 b and 601 c may be captured for review inportions 603, 605 and 607, respectively.

Based on the analysis of portions 603, 605 and 607, one or more ofperiods 603, 605 and 607 may be selected for automatically determining acall order for the user/caller-contact pair. For example, becauseportion 603 matches the most number of contact numbers and becauseportion 603 represents the most recent portion of the call history 600,period 603 may be used for determining the call order. In one or morearrangements, duplicate numbers may be eliminated so that each contactnumber only appears once in the analysis period. For example, becausethe number 555-555-3456 appears multiple times in period 603, the firstinstance of that number may be preserved while all others (e.g., thelast identified contact number) is eliminated. According to one or moreaspects, portion 603 may also be selected based on a similarity betweena time of day at which a current call is being placed and the time ofday associated with call history period 603.

FIG. 7 illustrates another example method for dynamically andautomatically generating an order in which to call or otherwise use aset of numbers and/or addresses of a contact based on a likelihood thata call will be answered. In step 700, a system such as a call managementsystem 200 of FIG. 2 may receive a request to determine an order inwhich to call a set of numbers and/or addresses associated with acontact. The request may be automatically generated upon a callerinitiating a call, for example. In response to the request, the systemmay determine one or more numbers and/or addresses corresponding to thecontact in step 705. In step 710, the system may analyze a call historyof the caller to identify instances in which the caller used one (oreach) of the numbers and/or addresses of the contact. In somearrangements, the system might only analyze a portion of the callhistory. For example, the portion of the call history may include themost recent week of calls, most recent two weeks of calls or otherrecent time period, a similar time of day, day of week or type of dayand the like.

In step 715, the system may subsequently determine a frequency withwhich each of the identified numbers and/or address of the contact wasanswered in the call history. Additionally or alternatively, a callhistory (or portion thereof) for each of the numbers and/or address ofthe contact may also be analyzed. For example, the system may determinehow frequently calls to each number and/or address is answeredregardless of caller based on the call history of the number or address.This information may be used in place of or in addition to the caller'scalling history. Optionally, in step 720, the system may furtherdetermine a percentage of calls to each number and/or address that wasanswered. For example, if 10 calls were made to number or address X inthe call history or portion of the call history, but only 2 wereanswered, the answer percentage may be 20%. Again, the call history ofthe contact's number or address may be used as well to determine theanswer percentage. In step 725, the system may define the order in whichto use the numbers and/or addresses of the contact based on thefrequency and/or percentage of calls answered at each number and/oraddress. For example, the order may be defined based on a decreasinganswer percentage, where the number or address with the highest answerpercentage is placed first in the call order and the number or addresswith the lowest answer percentage is placed last in the call order. Inanother example, the order may be defined based on an absolute number oftimes the number or address was answered.

In some arrangements, a hybrid call order determination system andmethod may be used. For example, a user may specify that a particularnumber is to be called first and allow a call determination system (suchas system 200 of FIG. 2) to determine an order of a remaining list ofcontact numbers. In another example, a caller may specify that a numbershould always be called as a last resort. In such instances, the callermay then allow the call determination system to specify the order inwhich the other numbers are to be dialed prior to the last resortnumber. Other configurations may also be used including allowing a userto define an order of 1, 2 or 3 numbers of a list of 5 numbers (e.g.,using only a subset of available numbers/addresses) for a particularcontact. In yet other arrangements, call orders may be a hybrid ofcaller determined, system determined and/or contact determined. Forexample, a user may be allowed to specify an order in which 2 of 5numbers of a contact are dialed while the remaining 3 are dialed in anorder specified by the contact. In this example, a contact specifiedorder may be invoked if the caller has not specified an order for thosenumbers.

According to one or more arrangements, a contact's presence or locationmay be detected and known to a call management system, such as asoftswitch or IMS core. Accordingly, a call order may be establishedusing presence or location information, e.g., by taking into account orprioritizing a number associated with the user's presence or locationahead of other numbers. FIG. 8 illustrates a method by which a callorder may be established using such information. In step 800, forexample, a call management system may detect the initiation of a call.In step 805, the call management system may identify a contactassociated with the call. Once the contact has been identified, the callmanagement system may subsequently determine one or more numberscorresponding to the contact in step 810. Furthermore, the callmanagement system may determine whether presence or location informationis available in step 815. In some arrangements, for example, a presentindicator may be stored in association with a number of a contact. Ifthe presence or location information is not available, the callmanagement system may attempt to determine such information in step 820.

Presence or location information may be known to or determined by thecall management system in a variety of ways. For example, a callmanagement system may request position information from a contact'sdevice such as a cellular phone. The cellular phone may include positiontracking systems such as a global position system (GPS) and/ortriangulation positioning capabilities. In another example, a callmanagement system may determine a position or presence of a contactbased on a calling device used to make a most recent call (e.g., byinspecting a call history) or a device used to access another service(e.g., Internet) provided by a service provider corresponding to thecall management system. In some arrangements, a presence indicator maybe stored in association with one or more of the determined numbers. Ifpresence or location information is still not available, as determinedin step 825, the call management system may default to a specifiedcalling order for the determined one or more numbers in step 830 or toan order selected by the user, for example. The calling system may thendetermine whether any of the calls are answered in step 855 and if not,direct the caller to voicemail in step 860. If, however, one or morenumbers were answered by a live individual (e.g., the contact), thecaller may be connected to the answered call in step 850.

If the contact's presence or location information is available or isdetermined, the call management system may subsequently determine one ormore calling devices and/or numbers to call first based on thedetermined location in step 835. For example, if a callee's officenumber is associated with a presence/location tag, the call managementsystem may identify the office number as an initially targeted number.Alternatively, the presence/location information may be only a factor inthe order determination methods described herein. In another example, ifa contact's location corresponds to the contact's home (e.g., a zipcodeor latitude/longitude generally matches the contact's home zipcode orlatitude/longitude), the contact's home phone number may be targeted. Instill another example, a contact's mobile phone may be targeted if thecontact's location does not correspond to a known location or does notcorrespond to a location having a known number for the contact. In step840, the call management system may call the determined devices/numberssequentially or simultaneously. In step 845, the call management systemmay determine whether any of the determined devices or numbers wasanswered by the contactor a live individual. If not, the call managementsystem may proceed to call one or more other numbers based on a defaultcalling order as shown in step 830. If one or more of the determinednumbers initially called was answered by the contactor another liveindividual, the call management system may connect the caller to theanswered call in step 850. Optionally, a presence tag may be stored inassociation with a calling device or number that is answered by thecontact.

The aspects described herein may also be applied in similar fashion tocommunication (e.g., transmission/reception) of electronic data such aselectronic mail (e-mail), text messages such as short messaging service(SMS) messages, multimedia messages such as multimedia messaging service(MMS) messages, instant messages (e.g., AOL Instance Messenger,GoogleTalk, etc.). For example, a user may have an instant messagingaccount, an SMS address or number, and a phone number. An orderdetermination system may define an order in which to use or contact eachof these numbers and addresses. For example, a system may initiatecommunication with a contact using an instant messaging address (e.g., ahandle or e-mail address) by transmitting a chat request to the contactat the instant messaging address. An SMS message or other electronicdata message may be considered unanswered if no response is receivedwithin a predefined amount of time. Alternatively or additionally, amessage may be unanswered if an automated reply indicating that themessage was not delivered or that the contact is unavailable isreceived. An order in which the data messaging addresses and/or numbersis defined based on the methodologies and systems described herein. Forexample, the order may be defined based on a user's previous order ofdata transmissions or calls and/or based on a frequency ofanswers/responses. Alternatively or additionally, a user may manuallydefine the order. Hybrid orders might also be applied. Still further,the order may be defined by the contact.

FIG. 9 illustrates an example method by which a messaging managementsystem may automatically initiate communications with a contact usingmultiple data messaging addresses and numbers. Using a number or addressmay include calling a contact at a voice number, generating and/orsending a chat request to a contact based on an instant messagingaddress, transmitting an SMS or MMS to a contact at a number or address,generating and/or transmitting an e-mail to another party via an e-mailaddress and the like. In step 900, the management system may identify aset of data messaging and/or voice communication addresses and numbersassociated with a contact with which a user wishes to initiatecommunications. An initiating party or initiator of a communication maybe an individual initiating communication to another person or device, aperson requesting transmission of an electronic message to anotherindividual or device and the like. Addresses and numbers may beretrieved from a user database, a service provider database and thelike. In step 905, the management system may determine an order in whichto use each of the addresses and numbers. For example, the order may bedefined according to the methods and aspects described herein. In step910, the management system may determine whether a first address ornumber to use corresponds to a voice address or a data messagingaddress. If voice, the management system may initiate communication withthe contact using the first address. For example, the system may place acall to the voice address as described in step 915. The system mayfurther determine whether the communication (e.g., the call) wasanswered in step 920. In some arrangements, a call may be consideredanswered only if a live person picks up the call. Alternatively, a callmight also be considered answered if an automated voice system picks upthe call. If so, the management system may establish a connectionbetween the caller and the contact in step 925 and the process may thenend without contacting the other numbers and/or addresses.

If, however, the first address or number corresponds to a data messagingaddress, the management system may initiate communication with thecontact using the data messaging address by, for example, preparing andtransmitting a data message to the address in step 930. The message maybe user generated, system generated or a combination of both. In oneexample, the message may include “Hi, I'm trying to contact you. Pleaselet me know if you are there.” In step 935, the management system maydetermine whether a response to the communication has been received. Thesystem may monitor for a response for a predefined amount of time (e.g.,30 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 1 hour, etc.). If noresponse is received, the management system may determine whether thepredefined amount of monitoring time has expired in step 940. If so, thesystem may proceed to step 945 as described below. In conjunction withmoving on to the next number or address, in some arrangements, thesystem may send a follow-up message to the previous address indicatingthat the caller will try another number or address. For example, themessage may include “I haven't received a response yet. I'll try you ata different number or address.” If an answer is received within theallotted monitoring time, the management system may end the processwithout contacting the other numbers and/or addresses.

If however, either a call or a data message is not answered, the callmanagement system may determine whether more addresses or numbers havenot been used in step 945. If so, the system may proceed to trying asubsequent number or address in the specified order in step 950 andreturn to step 910. Otherwise, the process may end. The party initiatingthe communication with the contact may also be notified that all numbersand addresses were tried but not answered. In this and other methodsdescribed herein, steps may be omitted or added, as desired.

FIG. 10 illustrates an example order configuration interface fordefining an order in which numbers and addresses for a contact are usedto initiate communication (e.g., called, e-mailed, instant messaged,sent an SMS or MMS message, etc.). Interface 1000 may display a list ofphone numbers and addresses 1001 associated with a particular contact,Jim X. The list of phone numbers and addresses 1001 may further includea description of the number 1003. For example, the description for phonenumber 1001 may indicate that number 1001 a is a home phone number whileaddress 1001 b is Jim's work e-mail address. If the user wishes to addanother number or address for the contact, the user may enter the numberor address in field 1007 and select add function button 1008. The usermay modify the order in which the numbers and addresses 1001 arecontacted by entering the order in fields 1009. Simultaneously callingmay be indicated by specifying the same order number for the two phonenumbers. Once a user has entered a desired order in fields 1009, theuser may select reorder function 1011 to update the order in the list.

Additionally or alternatively, for either voice addresses or dataaddresses, interface 1000 may allow a user to indicate whether a messageshould be left at the address if it is not answered (e.g., by a liveindividual) using option 1013. Additionally, interface 1000 includesoptions 1015 a and 1015 b for recording an audio or text message,respectively, to be delivered if a message is to be left.

The methods and features recited herein may further be implementedthrough any number of computer readable media that are able to storecomputer readable instructions. Examples of computer readable media thatmay be used include RAM, ROM, EEPROM, flash memory or other memorytechnology, CD-ROM, DVD or other optical disk storage, magneticcassettes, magnetic tape, magnetic storage and the like.

Additionally or alternatively, in at least some embodiments, the methodsand features recited herein may be implemented through one or moreintegrated circuits (ICs). An integrated circuit may, for example, be amicroprocessor that accesses programming instructions or other datastored in a read only memory (ROM). In some such embodiments, the ROMstores programming instructions that cause the IC to perform operationsaccording to one or more of the methods described herein. In at leastsome other embodiments, one or more of the methods described herein arehardwired into an IC. In other words, the IC is in such cases anapplication specific integrated circuit (ASIC) having gates and otherlogic dedicated to the calculations and other operations describedherein. In still other embodiments, the IC may perform some operationsbased on execution of programming instructions read from ROM or RAM,with other operations hardwired into gates and other logic of IC.Further, the IC may output image data to a display buffer.

Although specific examples of carrying out various features have beendescribed, those skilled in the art will appreciate that there arenumerous variations and permutations of the above-described systems andmethods that are contained within the spirit and scope of the disclosureas set forth in the appended claims. Additionally, numerous otherembodiments, modifications and variations within the scope and spirit ofthe appended claims will occur to persons of ordinary skill in the artfrom a review of this disclosure.

We claim:
 1. A method, implemented by one or more computing devices, comprising: receiving a request from a caller to initiate a communication session with a callee, wherein the callee is associated with a plurality of communication addresses; determining, in a communication history of the caller, a plurality of instances when the caller initiated communication with the callee using at least a first communication address; selecting a first instance, of the plurality of instances, when the caller initiated communication with the callee, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a time of day associated with the first instance and a time of day of the communication session; determining, based on the first instance, a first portion of the communication history; determining one or more instances, within the first portion of the communication history, when the caller initiated communication with the callee; determining, based on the first portion of the communication history, an order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session; and attempting to initiate the communication session by using one or more communication addresses, of the plurality of communication addresses, in the determined order.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a recency of communication between the caller and the callee.
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a number of communication addresses, identified within a time period of the first instance, that are associated with the callee.
 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the first portion of the communication history is defined by a time period encompassing the first instance.
 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the time period comprises a predefined time period before and after a time corresponding to the first instance.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein determining the order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session further comprises: determining a frequency of communications between the caller and the callee within the first portion of the communication history; and adjusting, based on the frequency of communications, the order in which the plurality of communication addresses should be used to initiate the communication session.
 7. The method of claim 1, wherein determining the order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session further comprises: deprioritizing one or more communication addresses in the order based at least in part on a frequency of unsuccessful attempts to initiate communication with the callee using the one or more communication addresses.
 8. One or more non-transitory computer readable media storing instructions that, when executed by one or more processors, cause the one or more processors to: receive a request from a caller to initiate a communication session with a callee, wherein the callee is associated with a plurality of communication addresses; determine, in a communication history of the caller, a plurality of instances when the caller initiated communication with the callee using at least a first communication address; select a first instance, of the plurality of instances, when the caller initiated communication with the callee, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a time of day associated with the first instance and a time of day of the communication session; determine, based on the first instance, a first portion of the communication history; determine one or more instances, within the first portion of the communication history, when the caller initiated communication with the callee; determine, based on the first portion of the communication history, an order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session; and attempt to initiate the communication session by using one or more communication addresses, of the plurality of communication addresses, in the determined order.
 9. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 8, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a type of day associated with the first instance and a type of day of the communication session.
 10. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 8, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a number of communication addresses, identified within a time period of the first instance, that are associated with the callee.
 11. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 8, wherein the first portion of the communication history is defined by a time period encompassing the first instance.
 12. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 11, wherein the time period comprises a predefined time period before and after a time corresponding to the first instance.
 13. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 8, wherein the instructions, when executed by one or more processors, further cause the one or more processors to determine the order by: determining a frequency of communications between the caller and the callee within the first portion of the communication history; and adjusting, based on the frequency of communications, the order in which the plurality of communication addresses should be used to initiate the communication session.
 14. The one or more non-transitory computer readable media of claim 8, wherein the instructions, when executed by one or more processors, further cause the one or more processors to determine the order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session by: deprioritizing one or more communication addresses in the order based at least in part on a frequency of unsuccessful attempts to initiate communication with the callee using the one or more communication addresses.
 15. A call management apparatus comprising: one or more processors; and memory storing instructions that, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the call management apparatus to: receive a request from a caller to initiate a communication session with a callee, wherein the callee is associated with a plurality of communication addresses; determine, in a communication history of the caller, a plurality of instances when the caller initiated communication with the callee using at least a first communication address; select a first instance, of the plurality of instances, when the caller initiated communication with the callee, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a time of day associated with the first instance and a time of day of the communication session; determine, based on the first instance, a first portion of the communication history; determine one or more instances, within the first portion of the communication history, when the caller initiated communication with the callee; determine, based on the first portion of the communication history, an order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session; and attempt to initiate the communication session by using one or more communication addresses, of the plurality of communication addresses, in the determined order.
 16. The call management apparatus of claim 15, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the call management apparatus to determine the order in which the plurality of communication addresses associated with the callee should be used to initiate the communication session by deprioritizing one or more communication addresses in the order based at least in part on a frequency of unsuccessful attempts to initiate communication with the callee using the one or more communication addresses.
 17. The call management apparatus of claim 15, wherein the instructions, when executed by the one or more processors, cause the call management apparatus to determine the order by: determining a frequency of communications between the caller and the callee within the first portion of the communication history; and adjusting, based on the frequency of communications, the order in which the plurality of communication addresses should be used to initiate the communication session.
 18. The call management apparatus of claim 15, wherein the first portion of the communication history is defined by a time period encompassing the first instance.
 19. The call management apparatus of claim 18, wherein the time period comprises a predefined time period before and after a time corresponding to the first instance.
 20. The call management apparatus of claim 15, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a recency of communication between the caller and the callee.
 21. The method of claim 1, wherein the selecting the first instance is based at least in part on a type of day associated with the first instance and a type of day of the communication session. 